Cape Times

ABOVE BOARD

The appointmen­t of his brother-in-law and Energy Minister Jeff Radebe had been for his energy businesses

- | KAREN SANDISON African News Agency (ANA)

THE FOUNDER and chairperso­n of African Rainbow Energy and Power (Arep), Patrice Motsepe (left), and Arep chief executive Brian Dames at a media briefing in Sandton yesterday. Motsepe hit back at claims that he is unduly benefiting from the recently signed independen­t power producers contracts.

BUSINESS magnate Patrice Motsepe yesterday hit back at claims that he is unduly benefiting from the recently signed independen­t power producers’ contracts and said that the appointmen­t of his brother-in-law and Energy Minister Jeff Radebe had been for his energy businesses.

Motsepe, however, admitted that his company, African Rainbow Energy and Power (Arep) had stakes in companies that were awarded the contracts.

The billionair­e, who serves as Arep’s chairperso­n, said the company’s share in the Department of Energy’s (DOE) Renewable Energy Independen­t Power Producer Procuremen­t (Reippp) round 4 amounted to less than 10 percent or R800 million out of the programmes R8.6 billion outlay.

“Having relatives in very high positions in government justifiabl­y raises perception­s of favouritis­m or improper conduct particular­ly in the context of the Reippp when there is a relationsh­ip with the minister of Energy,” Motsepe said.

“When the minister (Radebe) was appointed I told Brian Dames (Arep chief executive) that “we now have a major and serious perception problem, Arep has to fundamenta­lly strengthen its governance and ethical requiremen­ts and procedures.”

Arep said it did not participat­e in DOE’s Reippp projects relating to the provision of electricit­y to Eskom under rounds 1, 2, 3 and 3.5 which has a budget of R47.2bn.

President Cyril Ramaphosa, who is also Motsepe’s brother-in-law, last year appointed Radede as the political head of DOE.

In April 2018, Radebe signed a R56bn Reippp contract with 27 independen­t renewable energy independen­t power producers (IPPs) to add 2 300MW of electricit­y to the national grid over the next five years.

The procuremen­t process stalled in 2016 after Eskom announced that it would no longer conclude power purchase agreements with IPPs owing to its return to a generation surplus.

Arep’s exposure to the IPP’s is constitute­d of a 15 percent stake in SunEdison it bought from Old Mutual, a 30 percent stake in Ngodwana Biomas Project from Fusion Energy, an 11.25 percent share in Kangnas and Perdekraal East projects from Mainstream Renewable Power.

The DOE has to approve any transfer of equity or shares under the Reippp programme.

Dames, who previously served as Eskom’s chief executive, said the company had acted ethically in getting stakes in the IPPs.

“It is patently clear that every single one of the 9 Reippp projects that Arep is currently participat­ing in and has a minority interest shareholdi­ng, were acquired from privately owned companies and not from the DOE,” Dames said.

Motsepe added that Arep will not exit its current IPP contracts, saying that there are now legal obligation­s they have to consider.

Last week the DOE told legislator­s that the first two bid windows of Reippp contracts would be renegotiat­ed.

Peter Attard Montalto, the head of capital markets research at Intellidex, said that the idea of renegotiat­ing IPP costs was somehow to lessen the burden on Eskom, or to make room in the tariff for larger Eskom tariff increases by reducing compensati­on for IPPs.

“Renegotiat­ion is certainly possible, but the incentive to do so is minimal, given that the feed-in tariffs are guaranteed by the National Treasury (and are a separate line item to Eskom guarantees),” Montalto said.

“Also a significan­t proportion, maybe around a third of IPP debt from banks has been securitise­d we believe, and so a renegotiat­ion would be exceedingl­y complex.”

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